1
00:00:00,000 --> 00:00:07,000
This is Retro Sports Radio. Visit RetroSeasons.com for more sports history.

2
00:00:07,000 --> 00:00:12,000
This is Lou Bredette. In a few moments I'll tell you about my greatest sports thrill.

3
00:00:12,000 --> 00:00:26,000
This is Harry Wismer. What you're about to hear is a transcribed story of one of baseball's outstanding pitchers.

4
00:00:26,000 --> 00:00:31,000
And in the band our special guest Lou Bredette considers his greatest sports thrill.

5
00:00:31,000 --> 00:00:34,000
And Lou himself is here to tell us all about it.

6
00:00:34,000 --> 00:00:39,000
The first here is Bill Raddick with a message of interest from your United States Air Force.

7
00:00:39,000 --> 00:00:46,000
Put a promising player in the hands of a good coach and pretty soon that player is going to be really outstanding.

8
00:00:46,000 --> 00:00:51,000
It's the same way when a young man with mechanical ability receives training from the U.S. Air Force.

9
00:00:51,000 --> 00:00:59,000
Because the Air Force will teach him the latest techniques in such fields as electronics, rocket propulsion, photography.

10
00:00:59,000 --> 00:01:03,000
Yes, important skills that will pay him big dividends.

11
00:01:03,000 --> 00:01:07,000
And of course as an airman he'll be paid all the time he's learning.

12
00:01:07,000 --> 00:01:18,000
And say, men who join the Air Force at an early age find that when their active duty and reserve obligation are completed, they have a flying start on life.

13
00:01:18,000 --> 00:01:27,000
If you would like the chance to learn a well-paying skill, if you'd like to train for a really worthwhile future, check now with your local Air Force recruiter.

14
00:01:27,000 --> 00:01:32,000
Ask for the free booklet, Pocket Guide to Air Force Opportunities.

15
00:01:32,000 --> 00:01:39,000
Learn how you can go places faster as an airman in the United States Air Force.

16
00:01:39,000 --> 00:01:42,000
Now back to Harry Wismer.

17
00:01:42,000 --> 00:01:50,000
On the afternoon of April 17, 1956, Lou Bredette hurled the Milwaukee Braves to a 6-0 shot out over the Chicago Cubs.

18
00:01:50,000 --> 00:02:02,000
Although it was a splendid performance during which the slender right-hander permitted only five hits, retiring the last 11 batters in succession, ordinarily it would not merit much more than routine praise.

19
00:02:02,000 --> 00:02:10,000
But this game was a special one, for it marked the 38th shot out ever pitched on opening day in modern National League history.

20
00:02:10,000 --> 00:02:13,000
And the first by a Milwaukee pitcher.

21
00:02:13,000 --> 00:02:20,000
Exactly four months later to the day, Bredette flanked the St. Louis Cardinals 8-0 with another five-hitter.

22
00:02:20,000 --> 00:02:22,000
That was his sixth shot out of the year.

23
00:02:22,000 --> 00:02:28,000
Lou Bredette finished the 1956 season with a belated victory for Milwaukee on the last day.

24
00:02:28,000 --> 00:02:32,000
But it was too late for the Braves to win their first National League pennant.

25
00:02:32,000 --> 00:02:39,000
The 19th victory for Lou was his pitching tops, and his earned run average of 2.71 was the best in his league.

26
00:02:39,000 --> 00:02:45,000
That's not bad for a guy who was given to the Braves virtually as a gift five years before.

27
00:02:45,000 --> 00:02:51,000
Lou was used as a throw-in on a trade between the New York Yankees and Boston Braves.

28
00:02:51,000 --> 00:03:00,000
It took Lou Bredette a full year to acquire the Major League feel of things, but once he did, he settled down to become one of the top pitchers in the National League.

29
00:03:00,000 --> 00:03:08,000
It was no accident that this fidgety right-hander rose to become the star of Milwaukee's fine staff before reaching the age of 30.

30
00:03:08,000 --> 00:03:23,000
Possessor of a peculiar delivery, loose as a lariat, Lou can throw all three of his standard pitches, his curve, fastball, and slider, with any one of three deliveries, overhand, three-quarters, or sidearm.

31
00:03:23,000 --> 00:03:26,000
Bredette has probably the best sinker in baseball.

32
00:03:26,000 --> 00:03:37,000
When the Braves moved to Milwaukee in 1953, it is doubtful whether any player meant more to them in their incredible rise from seventh place to second than Lou Bredette.

33
00:03:37,000 --> 00:03:44,000
True, Eddie Matthews was the Major League home run king, and Warren Spahn was baseball's number one pitcher.

34
00:03:44,000 --> 00:03:50,000
But without Bredette's contributions, Milwaukee could never have jumped back into the National League pennant picture.

35
00:03:50,000 --> 00:03:56,000
Lou appeared in 46 games that year, winning 15 against only five setbacks.

36
00:03:56,000 --> 00:04:01,000
The next year, working again as a starter and reliever, Bredette again won 15 games.

37
00:04:01,000 --> 00:04:11,000
Despite his personal success, Lou Bredette refuses to accept full credit. I'd say that pitching is about 30% control and 70% luck, he says.

38
00:04:11,000 --> 00:04:18,000
If you can throw the ball where you want to, and you have good luck to back you up, you're going to win your share of games.

39
00:04:18,000 --> 00:04:31,000
Lou Bredette was born November the 22nd, 1926, in Nitro, West Virginia, which received its unusual name during World War I when a boom town grew up around an explosive plant.

40
00:04:31,000 --> 00:04:38,000
He was christened Selva Lewis, Jr., but for obvious reasons he preferred to use the middle name.

41
00:04:38,000 --> 00:04:51,000
After graduation from high school, Lou Bredette enlisted in the Air Corps Cadet Program, had his basic training at Shepherd Field, and later served at Chenalp Field and at Lincoln, Nebraska.

42
00:04:51,000 --> 00:05:03,000
His service career completed, Bredette entered the University of Richmond with his heart set on coaching, but he surprised everyone with his pitching ability and decided to leave school and go into professional baseball.

43
00:05:03,000 --> 00:05:21,000
Declining an offer from a Boston DRAVE scout, Bredette signed with the New York Yankees organization and for the next few years played for Norfolk, Virginia, Amsterdam, New York, Quincy, Illinois, and Kansas City before finally making it with the Yankee varsity in the fall of 1950.

44
00:05:21,000 --> 00:05:31,000
In the spring of 1951, Bredette became ill during the training period and after recovering was shipped by New York to the San Francisco Seals on the Pacific Coast.

45
00:05:31,000 --> 00:05:42,000
He had won 14 and lost 12 when on August 29th he was included in the deal that sent him to the Boston Braves for Johnny Sane and $50,000.

46
00:05:42,000 --> 00:05:46,000
Lou Bredette is aptly suited for relief as well as starting.

47
00:05:46,000 --> 00:05:53,000
Blessed with near perfect control, Lou is a low ball pitcher, the kind that gets the batter to hit the ball into the ground.

48
00:05:53,000 --> 00:06:01,000
I try to keep the ball low, especially with men on bases, Bredette explains. That's the best way to get a double play.

49
00:06:01,000 --> 00:06:11,000
Another thing, I don't believe in pacing myself. I try to give it my best as long as I can, figuring if I were out there will be someone in the bullpen to take my place.

50
00:06:11,000 --> 00:06:19,000
My theory is that if I coast at all, I might do it just enough to cost my team the ball game.

51
00:06:19,000 --> 00:06:27,000
Off the field, Lou Bredette has a carefree manner which belies the fact that he is one of the outstanding competitors in the game.

52
00:06:27,000 --> 00:06:33,000
Always ready with a gag, he has a keen sense of humor. Once he takes the mound though, jokes are forgotten.

53
00:06:33,000 --> 00:06:40,000
He is relaxed, not the type to be rattled by enemy batsmen or baserunners, but he tends strictly to business.

54
00:06:40,000 --> 00:06:48,000
Rival managers during the past three years have tried to ruffle his composure by accusing him of throwing a spitball.

55
00:06:48,000 --> 00:06:53,000
Lou Bredette merely laughs at them and goes about his business of getting the batters out.

56
00:06:53,000 --> 00:06:59,000
It's no use trying to tell them that I don't throw the spinner, he says. They won't believe me anyway.

57
00:06:59,000 --> 00:07:05,000
They've made up their minds that I throw that confounded pitch and nothing will change their minds.

58
00:07:05,000 --> 00:07:14,000
But that's all right with me, Lou Bredette adds with a big, impish grin on his face. All they did was give me another pitch.

59
00:07:14,000 --> 00:07:20,000
Now before you meet our special guest, Lou Bredette in person, in an interview from Municipal Stadium in Milwaukee,

60
00:07:20,000 --> 00:07:29,000
and hear about his greatest sports thrill, here is a message of interest to all young men who want to go places faster.

61
00:07:29,000 --> 00:07:35,000
Here's a word to the wise high school senior who wants to go places faster after graduation time.

62
00:07:35,000 --> 00:07:39,000
The United States Air Force offers you the world's finest technical training,

63
00:07:39,000 --> 00:07:47,000
plus the opportunity to earn college credit and all this while you're receiving full Air Force pay as an Airman.

64
00:07:47,000 --> 00:07:49,000
But that's only the beginning.

65
00:07:49,000 --> 00:07:56,000
Members of the Air Force team enjoy travel, adventure, the kind of living that's made to order for active young men.

66
00:07:56,000 --> 00:08:05,000
They fulfill their military obligation early, often by the time they're 22 years old, and they're off to a flying start in life.

67
00:08:05,000 --> 00:08:13,000
So whatever your future plans may be, get the full story today on opportunities in the U.S. Air Force.

68
00:08:13,000 --> 00:08:19,000
You may be eligible for specialized training in electronics, meteorology, or transportation,

69
00:08:19,000 --> 00:08:22,000
to name a few of the many careers that will pay big dividends.

70
00:08:22,000 --> 00:08:30,000
See your nearest recruiter and find out how you can go places faster on the all-volunteer Air Force team.

71
00:08:30,000 --> 00:08:33,000
Now back to Harry Wismer.

72
00:08:33,000 --> 00:08:37,000
Lou Burdette, what was your greatest sports thrill?

73
00:08:37,000 --> 00:08:40,000
Well, Harry, I've had plenty of thrills in baseball.

74
00:08:40,000 --> 00:08:46,000
I think that most in my mind, I think in every pitcher's mind, it's the last pitch of a ballgame.

75
00:08:46,000 --> 00:08:54,000
When that last man is out, you build up quite a bit of tension inside your body, and then all at once it's just let go.

76
00:08:54,000 --> 00:09:00,000
And it's quite a relaxed feeling, and I think every pitcher will say that that's their greatest thrill in baseball.

77
00:09:00,000 --> 00:09:05,000
Lou, do you recall the first time you ever pitched in the major leagues?

78
00:09:05,000 --> 00:09:09,000
Yes, I certainly do. It was in Yankee Stadium in 1950.

79
00:09:09,000 --> 00:09:14,000
I came up from Kansas City, and I'd been playing in smaller ball parts.

80
00:09:14,000 --> 00:09:23,000
And then I went in the bullpen in Yankee Stadium, and Casey Stingo called me in against Washington in the fifth or sixth inning.

81
00:09:23,000 --> 00:09:28,000
We were getting beaten kind of bad at the time, and Gil Cohen was hitting.

82
00:09:28,000 --> 00:09:34,000
I know I walked out on the mound, and Casey handed me the ball, and he says, go get him, kid.

83
00:09:34,000 --> 00:09:40,000
And I stood out there alone then, and I started looking up a little towards the catcher.

84
00:09:40,000 --> 00:09:46,000
And then I saw this big, massive stands in the background, and I kept looking on up, higher and higher.

85
00:09:46,000 --> 00:09:51,000
It seemed like the higher I would look, the more stands there were, and I think my knees actually started knocking.

86
00:09:51,000 --> 00:09:56,000
But then I settled back down, and I threw two pitches, and Gil Cohen popped up the shortstop.

87
00:09:56,000 --> 00:09:59,000
And that's my first pitch in Major League Baseball.

88
00:09:59,000 --> 00:10:04,000
How much does a pitcher rely on his catcher to call the kind of ball to be pitched?

89
00:10:04,000 --> 00:10:09,000
Well, I think that's according to the experience that a catcher has.

90
00:10:09,000 --> 00:10:15,000
I know Del Crandall and Del Rice on our ball club, I've pitched to them several times,

91
00:10:15,000 --> 00:10:19,000
and I rely on their decision because they know what pitches I throw.

92
00:10:19,000 --> 00:10:26,000
But if there's a young catcher or a new catcher that's never caught me before, then I more or less pitch my own ballgame

93
00:10:26,000 --> 00:10:31,000
because they don't know exactly what pitches I like to rely on in a pinch and what ones I don't.

94
00:10:31,000 --> 00:10:37,000
Lou, what part does a pitching coach play in helping a fellow make the grade in the Major Leagues?

95
00:10:37,000 --> 00:10:42,000
Well, Harry, I think a pitching coach can help a lot of guys, especially the young guy,

96
00:10:42,000 --> 00:10:50,000
in developing new pitches and maybe linking their stride to bring their delivery down to where the strike zone is

97
00:10:50,000 --> 00:10:57,000
always better to pitch low than high unless you're one of those exceptionally hard throwers, which most people aren't.

98
00:10:57,000 --> 00:11:02,000
But I think a pitching coach can also help you when you're going bad.

99
00:11:02,000 --> 00:11:07,000
He's seen you when you were pitching good ball, and then when he sees you when you're having a hard time out there,

100
00:11:07,000 --> 00:11:13,000
maybe he can pick up a fault in your delivery or something that you didn't have when you were going good.

101
00:11:13,000 --> 00:11:20,000
And also, like I said, he can help you with certain pitches like Bucky Walters, who is now with the New York Giants.

102
00:11:20,000 --> 00:11:25,000
When he was in Milwaukee, he helped me, and in Boston, he helped me a lot with the screwball.

103
00:11:25,000 --> 00:11:32,000
I was trying to develop something that broke away from the left-handed hitter, and I think Bucky helped me a tremendous amount with that.

104
00:11:32,000 --> 00:11:38,000
Lou, could you tell us how different managers you have played for go about taking a pitcher out of the box?

105
00:11:38,000 --> 00:11:45,000
Well, Harry, I guess they have different methods, but some of them, when they come out one time,

106
00:11:45,000 --> 00:11:52,000
you're definitely gone, and there are others that come out and they ask you how you're feeling, and of course they know how you're doing.

107
00:11:52,000 --> 00:12:00,000
When Charlie Grimm was with our ball club, well, when Charlie came out or sent someone out, well, 99% of the time, you were gone.

108
00:12:00,000 --> 00:12:03,000
Of course, Fred Haney took over later on.

109
00:12:03,000 --> 00:12:10,000
Well, Fred is a guy that would come out and talk to you, and if he decided you were through, well, then he would tell you.

110
00:12:10,000 --> 00:12:14,000
But Charlie left no doubt hardly in your mind when you saw him go to the water fountain.

111
00:12:14,000 --> 00:12:17,000
You know, you had one more man if you didn't get him out, well, you were gone.

112
00:12:17,000 --> 00:12:25,000
I remember one time, actually, when Grimm came out, and one of the four times, I think, in four years, I saw him leave a pitcher in.

113
00:12:25,000 --> 00:12:32,000
He came out to me, and he left me in, and the very next pitch, I think, a guy got a single and drove in to a winning run.

114
00:12:32,000 --> 00:12:35,000
I was gone the next one. That's for sure.

115
00:12:35,000 --> 00:12:39,000
Now, was there a pitch or a ball game that you wish you could play over again?

116
00:12:39,000 --> 00:12:53,000
Yes, Harry, I've thrown a lot of pitches that I would like to have back, but I think the one that sticks in my mind more than any other is the one I threw in 1954, I think it was, 54, to Gil Hodges in Ebbets Field.

117
00:12:53,000 --> 00:13:01,000
It was in the fifth inning, and I had a no-hitter going, and I threw a fastball to Gil, and he hit a home run, and it turned out to be the only hit of the ball game.

118
00:13:01,000 --> 00:13:05,000
So far, that's the best game I've pitched in the major.

119
00:13:05,000 --> 00:13:10,000
As a pitcher, what pattern in the league would you like to have hitting for you and your team?

120
00:13:10,000 --> 00:13:19,000
Harry, I'm telling you, there's a lot of them I'd like to have on my side, but I think there's one hitter in the National League that I would definitely like to have on my side,

121
00:13:19,000 --> 00:13:25,000
and he's the same old stand-by, stand the man. I mean, he's a great hitter.

122
00:13:25,000 --> 00:13:39,000
Stan is the type of guy that he'll give you enough credit that if you pitch him outside, he'll go to the opposite field with you, pitch him inside, he'll pull the ball on you, and I don't pitch him down the middle because I'm too close out that way.

123
00:13:39,000 --> 00:13:45,000
But actually, Stan is a guy that he'll beat you any way he can. He's a great hitter.

124
00:13:45,000 --> 00:13:50,000
Thank you very much, Lou Burdek, one of baseball's outstanding pitchers.

